Tag Archives: harrisburg

The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Santa gifts a toy to Julien, a patient in the pediatric unit at UPMC Harrisburg.

Need to catch up on what happened in Harrisburg this week? We’ve got you covered. Find the latest on end-of-the-year budget meetings and other stories below.

Broad Street Market renovations for the brick building were underway when one of the historic structure’s walls collapsed Monday, our online story reported. 

Dauphin County Commissioners passed the county’s 2026 budget, which includes a property tax hike for the second year in a row. Read the full story here. 

Gov. Josh Shapiro said Harrisburg officials needed to “get their act together” after a wall on the Broad Street Market’s brick building collapsed during its reconstruction, our online story reported. A 2023 fire left the brick building heavily damaged; the city began rebuilding the structure in the latter half of 2025. 

Harrisburg City Council passed its budget Monday night but refused to give a raise to Mayor Wanda Williams and other city officials. Full story here. 

Harrisburg Fire Bureau was awarded $7 million in 2025-26 state budget funds, a $2 million uptick from last year. The jump was celebrated by Gov. Josh Shapiro and others at a press conference, our online story reported. 

Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority wants to send $50,000 to CREDC, which would go toward an economic development plan for downtown Harrisburg, our online story reported. 

Midtown Cinema is showing “The Secret Agent,” a film set in a politically polarized Brazil in 1977; it captivated our movie reviewer. 

Morning Glory, a Hummelstown general store, is a great place to stock up on basics. Learn more about the owner’s commitment to running the business in our magazine feature. 

Sara Bozich has a list of everything going on this weekend—from Harrisburg’s biggest lesbian party to a reindeer bar crawl. Read more here. 

Strand Theatre has been a cultural crown jewel in York for a century. Find out more about the historic venue in our magazine story. 

Sweet T & Greens, an upscale comfort food restaurant, will open where Home 231 once was. According to our online story, it’s slated to open in January next year. 

UPMC Harrisburg received a visit from Santa Claus, who gifted toys to children in the pediatric unit and emergency department. Read the story here. 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg! 

Continue Reading

Financial oversight board assigns $50K for downtown Harrisburg revitalization plan

Vacant properties on N. 2nd Street in downtown Harrisburg.

A state-created panel that oversees Harrisburg’s finances wants to put $50,000 of its own money toward revitalizing downtown Harrisburg.

“It is such a spotlight issue with businesses relocating, retail relocating and restaurants closing, so there really needs to be a focus there,” Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (ICA) Chair Doug Hill said of the downtown at a board meeting on Wednesday.

At the meeting, ICA board members gave the authority’s solicitor and authority manager the go-ahead to draft a contract that would give $50,000 in funding to the Capital Region Economic Development Corporation (CREDC) to be put toward an economic development plan for downtown Harrisburg.

Although CREDC, the economic development arm of the Harrisburg Regional Chamber, would control the money, Hill emphasized that the move was in “absolute partnership” with the city. Authority members said they will meet today with Mayor Wanda Williams and a legislative delegation to work through how the economic development plan will be developed.

“Who’s driving the train is a little bit of an open question, but for convenience, it makes sense to run it through CREDC,” Hill said at the meeting.

He further clarified the downtown focus does not indicate a lack of intent to develop a comprehensive economic plan for the entire city.

“That’s certainly part of the project, part of the goal set,” Hill said. “But the first focus, I think everyone’s coming to the conclusion, needs to be on the downtown.”

He said that Pittsburgh did something similar to what the ICA is shooting for—successfully, bringing in a local regional chamber to contract with an outside firm for a development plan. The plan focused primarily on Pittsburgh’s downtown and then the area’s general region. This later attracted additional investments from the state level, Hill said.

“We understand that Governor Shapiro is now engaged and has an interest in having the project move forward,” Hill added of the plan for Harrisburg.

Michael Cassidy, legal counsel for the authority, said that he thought that the ICA had the authority to make such a move because Harrisburg remains under Act 47 oversight.

“It’s my opinion that this authority can enter into agreements, whether with the City of Harrisburg or third parties, such as CREDC, that would be providing services for the benefit of the City of Harrisburg and its financial recovery,” Cassidy said.

Jeffrey Stonehill, authority manager for the ICA, suggested that the contract be written in such a way that the money can be forgiven “as a secondary action.” There would be no reason CREDC would give the money back to the ICA “other than failure to perform,” he noted.

Authority board member Kathy Speaker MacNett clarified that the $50,000 comes from the ICA.

“The ICA has operated on a miserly basis to say the least,” she said. “We have not spent a lot of money and, as a result, we have a surplus.”

She clarified that the ICA believes the plan could help the city.

“We, as the ICA, think this is important enough that we’re willing to put our money where our mouth is,” she said.

To learn more about the ICA, visit its website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg! 

Continue Reading

Every Thursday night, Blacklisted Poets group brings words to life off the page

Blacklisted Poets cohost Amy Trout reads a poem at HMAC.

“It’s very bright up here tonight, guys, and it feels really weird,” laughs poet Amy Trout from a dimly lit  Stage on Herr at HMAC.

She shakes it off and puts another hand on the mic.

“Okay, I’m going to read one that I’ve read a few times. I wrote it this spring, but I’ve been really working on this poem, so you’re going to hear it again,” she tells the crowd of 20 on a frigid December Thursday night.

She jumps into verse. Basking in the glow of a fireplace projected floor-to-ceiling onto the wall, people nod along with her, as if to say, “I’ve been there too.” They smile at quirky lines. When she’s read the last word, she hits a bell on the podium to mark the poem’s end.

The echo of footsteps leaving the stage, cloaked by applause, say: It is time for the next speaker.

Trout, and her friend and fellow poet Anna Jones, are the cohosts of Blacklisted Poets, a Harrisburg poetry reading group that meets every Thursday at 8 p.m. In the winter, hidden away in HMAC’s basement. In the summer, out in the open in the venue’s courtyard.

“We accept any kind of poetry, any genre, any form,” Trout says.

Founded by the late Harrisburg poet Marty Esworthy as “the Almost Uptown Poetry Cartel,” the group has been meeting on the same night now for roughly 30 years. In 2021, Trout and Jones took over the group.

They changed the group’s name to mark its new era. Its “Blacklisted” title is a nod to how the group bounced between venues early after the takeover, reading at places like coffee shops, delis or bookstores.

They eventually found a home at HMAC where Trout’s husband, Kevyn Knox, is a manager. Its late hours are a plus for the poets. Because the venue is open until 2 a.m., they can read a bit past their 10 p.m. end time, if needed.

Jones reveres how the group has naturally attracted a diverse following.

“It’s one of the only places in this city where you have people of all backgrounds, all ages, all cultures,” Jones says.

She herself is a transplant from England, who came to Harrisburg in 2008. The following year, she took a class at HACC with Rick Kearns, the current poet laureate of Harrisburg, who suggested she come to the group to socialize with other poets.

As she recalls, doing so marked a big turning point in her life.

“This poetry reading legit saved my life when I first moved to the country,” Jones says.

She’s made countless lifelong friends through the group and regards its continued Thursday night occurrence as a form of tribute to her late mentor, whose values, she says, remain at the group’s core.

“His passion was the fact that poetry is supposed to live off the page. It’s an oral tradition. It goes right back to Beowulf, to the Middle Ages, to stories told around campfires,” Jones says.

She says too many people think of poetry “as just being in books.”

“Saying something out loud is so much more powerful than just writing it down,” she says.

Trout brings up another rule of Esworthy’s—never apologizing for your art. The forum of the readings fosters an energy of acceptance.

Poets at the reading bring life experiences of all kinds to the stage.

One poet tells of a challenging predicament: getting a court summons in the mail, months after a car crash that seriously injured her back. It took her months to physically recover from the wreck. She tells the crowd, in poetic verse, how she is now being charged for drug possession for THC found in her car’s glove compartment. Her boyfriend’s THC by the way, she says.

She worries the charge could impact her nursing license. She curses the male driver who stopped in front of her in a fit of road rage, upending her life.

Another poet examines her past self. Line by line, she wonders if she would have ended up with her abusive ex-husband if she wouldn’t have been sexually assaulted at a teenage party.

Jones says the nature of poetry is that it often brings such emotional subjects to the forefront.

“People talk about holding space—that’s what poetry does,” Jones says.

This offers poets a chance, Trout adds, to get to know each other better and ultimately, offer support.

“Nobody in this room will ever be mean to anybody about what they read or judge them,” Trout says. “If anything, they’re overly supportive of whatever people are reading on-stage.”

Another poet, Abbie, agrees.

“I call this my weekly therapy,” she quips.

When Trout and Jones talk about what Blacklisted Poets means to them, they talk about community. Because people introduce themselves to the crowd when they go up to the mic, it doesn’t take long for people to become “regulars.”

The group is ever-changing. New poets show up every week, some stick around. Some become entrenched in the community.

“We ask everybody their name. We talk to everybody. It’s very community-oriented,” Trout says.

“In the nearly 30 years I’ve been doing this, I get more inspiration for new poems from listening than from anywhere else,” Trout says.

The group boasts several veteran members who have been coming for upwards of 20 years.

“Most of my closest friends in the world came from this poetry reading in one way or another,” Trout says.

After two hours and more than a dozen poets, walking the line between heartbreak and humor, Jones gets up to close out the night. She tells the group how much she appreciates them. She thanks them for coming out and sharing what was on their minds.

“It took bravery, it took strength, it took energy,” Jones says. “This is one of the best parts of my week.”

With that, she introduces the night’s final poem. It’s about her creative path. It winds through lives writing novels, or plays, or designing costumes—that she could never pursue.

“This is about being a poet,” she says. “This is called: ‘I’m not for you.’”

The Blacklisted Poets meet at HMAC on Thursday nights. For more information, visit the group’s Facebook page.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Monument Project honors Black abolitionist William Howard Day, 125 years after his death

Commonwealth Monument Project director Lenwood Sloan speaks at the ceremony as Harrisburg historian Calobe Jackson, Jr. listens.

Celebrating a historic Harrisburg leader, the Commonwealth Monument Project unveiled a bust of 19th century abolitionist and educator William Howard Day Wednesday to be displayed in the Pennsylvania Capitol Complex.

The bust was presented to the Capitol in the building’s East Wing on the 125th anniversary of Day’s death. It was gifted, alongside a bronze map of the Old Eighth Ward, which Lenwood Sloan, director of the monument project, hopes will hang in close proximity.

Among his many accomplishments, Day (1825-1900) was elected as Harrisburg’s first Black school board president in 1891. Educated at Oberlin College, where he earned both bachelor’s and master’s degrees, Day was the only Black graduate in his 1847 class. He went on to be a journalist, teacher and avid civil rights advocate for African Americans.

Lenwood Sloan, director of the monument project, said Wednesday that it was important to continue to honor Day in “remembrance of who we are, what we are, where we have been” and “how far we have to go.”

He brought together speakers of multiple generations to celebrate.

“We are the past, present and future of our cause,” Sloan said.

Jamar Thrasher, president of Kennedy Blue Communications, noted he admired Day for being an avid pursuer of freedom and education, although both were difficult for Day as a 19th century Black man.

“To this day, that persistence and that love for education still lives — what he did on the school board, what he did throughout Harrisburg, and ultimately, what he did throughout the entire world,” Thrasher said.

William Howard Day’s commemorative bust.

Sloan said the idea to honor Day came from local historians and community leaders Calobe Jackson, Jr. and Sharonn Williams — both long involved in African American historical projects throughout the region. PA Sen. Patty Kim presented Jackson and Williams with proclamations at the ceremony to honor them. Jackson’s congratulated the historian on turning 95 years old earlier this year.

The Commonwealth Monument Project also presented a wreath for Day’s grave to Elizabeth Jefferies, with the Pennsylvania Hallowed Grounds project. The grounds project works to preserve African American cemeteries.

Day is buried at Lincoln Cemetery, Harrisburg’s oldest surviving Black cemetery.

To learn more about the Commonwealth Monument Project, visit this site.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Opening this week, photography show captures Harrisburg with local eyes

harrisburg moon

Michael Yatsko took this featured photo from Wormleysburg.

Get ready to see the city through a different lens – or, should we say, four different lenses?

The Art Association of Harrisburg’s hyper-local, four-man photography show “All Access Harrisburg” is opening Friday, Dec. 5. It features 80 shots, roughly 20 a piece, by photographers William Hicks, Dr. Eliseo Rosario, Ron Steficek and Michael Yatsko.

“It’s centered around Harrisburg and her inhabitants,” said Nathan Foster, the association’s director of exhibitions.

Many photos spotlight well-known city landmarks.

Multiple shots of the Broad Street Market’s stone building offer the viewer a friendly, familiar sight. Photographer Hicks also captured the brick building’s post-fire devastation with two large aerial shots of the dilapidated structure, taken by drone.

Hicks said his photos in the exhibit mark a reexamination of the place he grew up after returning from Bangkok, Thailand, where he lived from 2019 to 2024.

“It was a difficult transition coming back,” he said, particularly because a lot had changed during the pandemic. 

When he came home, he noticed small businesses struggling and the city’s noticeable absence of state workers, now working remotely.

“It just seemed like Harrisburg had lost some of its charm that it used to have,” he said. “That’s what I was searching for in these photos. Reminding myself it is still a beautiful place, even though it feels different.”

Yatsko said many of the shots he submitted are a tribute to his love for the city.

He’s particularly proud of a shot that took years of planning to line up: one of the sun shining through the Star of David atop Beth El Temple. He used sky-tracking apps to find out when the sun would be directly behind the Jewish synagogue’s Star, narrowing it down to a two-day time span.

“When you do all the planning, sometimes the weather just doesn’t work out, or I’m not available, but this one actually worked out perfectly,” he said.

Another well-planned photo features a large crescent moon glowing behind the State Capitol’s dome. For this shot, Yatsko tracked the moon’s stage and location and shot it between 2 and 3 a.m. along S. Front Street in Wormleysburg.

“In order to make the moon appear super big like that, you have to get as far away from the subject as possible,” he explained.

In intimate, black-and-white shots, many of Steficek’s images feature the people of Harrisburg themselves, often in well-known locations. One captures a train passenger waiting on the wooden benches at Harrisburg’s train station; another, a spectator on a bench at Riverfront Park.

“He’s really good at this subtle portraiture,” explained Foster, who curated the exhibit.

Rounding out the show, photographer Rosario, a retired pediatrician, brings environmental shots, including two bald eagles flying along the river and a foggy island in the Susquehanna River.

“He’s excellent at capturing nature photography,” Foster said, also complementing Rosario’s use of color saturation.

Ultimately, Foster hopes that viewers will take a sense of community away from the exhibition.

“Harrisburg is beautiful, even with all our problems and differences,” he said. “We can all recognize certain landmarks and feel pride in being here or being from here.”

For Yatsko, a shot of the Subway Cafe exemplifies such pride. 

The local pizza joint wasn’t a subject he would have gravitated toward, he explained. But someone had asked if he had a nice photo of the building — which was, to them, a sentimental spot.

“A girl reached out. Her best friend’s grandfather, he had just passed,” Yatsko said, explaining the pair used to go to dinner there together weekly.

He set out to get a shot that would reflect this significance after a rainstorm. The resulting work shows the restaurant’s reflection through the puddles in the street.

“She was so happy,” he said, noting the photo proved surprisingly popular with others, too. “It’s not normally something I would go out and photograph, but people really responded to that.”

The “All Access Harrisburg” flyer features William Hicks’ drone shot of Fulton Bank.

“All Access Harrisburg” is available to view Dec. 5 to Jan. 8. The Art Association will host an opening reception for “All Access Harrisburg” on Friday, Dec. 19 from 5 to 8 p.m. For more information about the Art Association, visit its website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Harrisburg gears up for annual tree lighting ceremony, holiday parade

Harrisburg officials will light the city’s tree in an evening ceremony on Friday, Nov. 21.

Harrisburg is kicking off its holiday season this weekend.

At a press conference Monday, Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams announced that the city’s annual tree lighting ceremony will take place Friday, Nov. 21 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the MLK Jr. City Government Center.

“The entire event is designated and designed to bring joy, comfort and a sense of connection to everyone,” Williams said. 

The tree lighting will take place at 7 p.m.. This year’s Christmas tree comes from McCurdy’s Tree Farm in Dillsburg.

Guests will be offered free cocoa and cookies. They are encouraged to wear their best ugly holiday sweaters for the chance to win gift cards in an ugly sweater contest. The event will also feature an artists’ market for holiday gift shopping and children’s crafts.

“We encourage everyone to enjoy dinner at one of our local restaurants while downtown for the celebration,” added Williams. 

Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams announced the city’s tree lighting ceremony and holiday parade at a press conference on Monday, Nov. 17.

The mayor also announced that the morning after the tree lighting, on Saturday, Nov. 22, the city will host its annual holiday parade.

The parade will feature 100 total entries, including a float with Santa Claus. The best in-theme float will earn a $100 gift card.

Spectators are invited to gather around the parade’s 1.5-mile loop. The event begins at Market and Front Streets at 10 a.m.. It will take place between Market and North streets on both Front and N. 2nd streets. 

For 2025, the parade will feature pet-themed “Deck the Paws” floats as well as towering parade balloons, including Optimus Prime, Baby Smurf and Big Bird.

“The whole family is sure to enjoy this event,” said Harrisburg’s director of communications Mischelle Moyer. “It’ll be a memorable start to the holiday season in downtown Harrisburg.” 

Six high school marching bands will participate: Central Dauphin East, Harrisburg, Shippensburg, Steelton-Highspire, Susquenita and Upper Dauphin. The city is offering prizes for the best performing band. First place will take $500; second place, $300; and third place, $200.

Twelve dance teams will compete for cash prizes as well. First place will take $150; second place, $100; and third place, $50.  

Stationed in front of city hall, local television and news personalities will serve as the parade’s judges. The parade contest winners will be announced by the city in Strawberry Square after the event. Parade attendees are invited to gather in the building for free hot chocolate, cookies and a Santa Claus meet-and-greet. 

The Market Square Garage will offer $10 parking from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., courtesy of Park Harrisburg. Bus stations are also located near the parade route. 

On Saturday, ahead of the parade, the Market Street Bridge, as well as N. 2nd Street and Front Street from Market to Forster streets, will close to traffic starting at 7 a.m.. They are expected to reopen at about 2 p.m.. 

For more information, visit Harrisburg’s parade website. 

If you like what we do, please support our work.
Continue Reading

The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

From left: Harrisburg Director of Communications Mischelle Moyer, Pennsylvania representative Nate Davidson, and one of the Harrisburg Tool Library founding members, Kate Lally, pose with a $25,000 check for the library’s startup.

We’ve got you covered on what happened this week in Harrisburg. From city meetings to tree plantings, catch up on what you missed, below. 

At a special meeting Thursday night, the Harrisburg School Board discussed what to do with William Penn, our online story reported. The former vocational school has sat vacant for 14 years. 

Bob’s Art Blog shines the spotlight on fiber art installations in the area, in our online story. 

The Broad Street Market appointed five new board members, our online story reported. It also moved to welcome a new vendor that will serve fried chicken. 

Capital Region Water addressed reports of discolored water earlier this week, our online story reported. 

City Council approved the first phase of an adaptive reuse project for the former Polyclinic Hospital and tabled a proposal to create senior housing in a downtown office building, our online story reported. 

City officials are working with PPL to fix dozens of downtown streetlights, our online story reported. A press release on Wednesday stated that about 74 streetlights were out. 

Dauphin County is looking to fill various board positions, our online story reported. 

Gamut Theatre is running a production of “The Mikado, Eh!” from Nov. 8 through Nov. 23, our November magazine story reported. Get a sneak peek, in our review 

Strong winds damaged a Harrisburg firehouse, our online story reported. A historic association urged the city to sell the property before it’s “too late.” 

St. Stephen’s Cathedral unveiled a new digital organ, our online story reported. The church hopes it will help them reach a new audience. 

Sara Bozich has lots of events on the schedule for this weekend, if you need plans. Her list includes Hersheypark Christmas Candylane’s opening and more. 

The Harrisburg Tool Library secured a $25,000 grant to help it get startedour online story reported. The Midtown-based nonprofit plans to open in January. 

Trees were planted around Harrisburg on Friday, our online story reported. The plantings were made possible through TreePennsylvania grants. 

Do you receive TheBurg Daily, our daily digest of news and events delivered right to your email inbox? If not, sign up here! 

Support quality local journalism. Join Friends of TheBurg today! 

Continue Reading

Community Roots: Neighbors, officials plant dozens of trees in Midtown, South Harrisburg

From left: City of Harrisburg forester Cody Legge, Jean Joint owner Bob de Gomar, and Friends of Midtown beautification committee chair Ed Jaroch pose with one of Midtown’s new street trees.

You may see some new street trees around the city this week. 

On Friday, Friends of Midtown planted three trees on the 1200 block of N. 3rd Street, with more planned for the city, and state officials announced new tree plantings in South Harrisburg.

Friends of Midtown planted Japanese Lilac trees, one outside of the Jean Joint, one by the neighboring parking lot, and one outside of the Fine Wine and Spirits. 

“It’s nice that they’re doing it,” said Jean Joint owner Bob de Gomar. “Anything to improve the neighborhood.” 

FOM received 15 trees total to plant around Harrisburg this month, all funded through TreePennsylvania’s Fall 2025 Bare Root Tree grant program. It is the group’s first year offering free street trees to interested community members with available spots.  

Fifteen community members, scattered between Uptown, Midtown, and Downtown, applied for the trees through FOM. The plantings—11 of which are in Midtown—are part of a conscious Harrisburg beautification effort, inspired by the group’s conversations with local business owners and community members. FOM plans to offer the program again next year and take applications from interested Harrisburg residents. 

“What we’ve heard from small businesses is just how important beautification is,” said Andy Hughes, FOM’s vice president and business committee chair. 

City of Harrisburg forester Cody Legge helped determine what trees would grow best on the block in the tight sidewalk spots.  

“I gauge off of how wide the spot is and if there’s other restrictions like overhead lines,” Legge said.  

(From left)DCNR Secretary Cindy Adams Dunn, Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams, city Communications Director Mischelle Moyer and City Forester Cody Legge planted a tree near Cloverly Heights park.

Earlier Friday morning, Legge held a press conference with the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) to announce the planting of 33 trees in Harrisburg’s Cloverly Heights neighborhood. These trees were also provided to the city. through the TreePennsylvania Bare-Root Tree Program.

The city’s Tree Tenders program volunteers began planting following the press conference.

“These trees are more than leaves and branches; they are symbols of resiliance,” Mayor Wanda Williams said. “Each one planted represents another step towards a greener, cleaner and a healthier Harrisburg.”

TreePennsylvania is a private, statewide nonprofit committed to increasing tree canopy throughout the state. Visit their website to learn more.  

For more information on Friends of Midtown, visit their website. 

Maddie Gittens contributed to this story. 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg! 

Continue Reading

Harrisburg says it’s working with PPL to fix downtown streetlight outages

Streetlight on Market Street.

City officials say they are working to fix dozens of streetlights that are currently dark.

A press release on Wednesday stated that Harrisburg crews are working with PPL to address lighting issues in downtown and surrounding neighborhoods.

The city said that a resident-conducted report showed that about 74 streetlights were non-functioning.

The release states that the issue is due to a “complex underground electrical issue,” requiring more work than a simple bulb change. Harrisburg said that their crews have been assisting PPL’s work on the lights for over a week and will continue through this week. However, the city emphasized that the problem is a utility issue, not a city infrastructure problem.

According to Traffic Signal and Streetlight Manager, Veronica Lefever, several areas have had light restored, including Market Street, from N. 2nd to N. 4th streets, and N. 3rd Street, from Walnut to Market streets.

Map showing downtown streetlight outages.

Crews will be back out at 3 a.m. on Friday to evaluate progress and address remaining problems immediately, into the early hours of Saturday.

To report lighting issues or request updates, Harrisburg recommends contacting PPL Electric Utilities directly at 1-800-342-5775 or by visiting their website.

“The City of Harrisburg appreciates the community’s cooperation as we work together to restore safe, well-lit streets for all,” the release said.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!          

Continue Reading

Celebrating 40 Years of Care, Community, and Compassion

For four decades, Alder Health Services has been dedicated to improving the health and well-being of individuals living with HIV/AIDS and members of the LGBTQ+ community across South Central Pennsylvania. Our mission is to provide an inclusive, affirming environment that empowers every person we serve to lead a healthy and fulfilling life.

As we proudly celebrate 40 years of service, we honor our deep commitment to communities that have long been underserved by the traditional health care system. Through an integrated model of care, Alder Health provides affirming primary health services, medical case management, community support, on-site and mail-order pharmacy, and HIV/STD testing and treatment. We also operate a food pantry and clothing market and offer reproductive health and family planning programs—all focused on treating the whole person and supporting informed, equitable health decisions.

Today, we face growing challenges as anti-LGBTQ+ policies threaten to undermine the safety,
dignity, and well-being of our community. These policies have far-reaching effects—impacting
physical, mental, emotional, financial, and social health. At a time when federal laws are being
misused to discriminate in education, health care, and employment, Alder Health remains
steadfast in our mission: to build safety, community, and care for the powerless, the silenced, and the underserved. We are deeply committed to advancing social justice and health equity in every service we provide. However, to continue meeting these challenges and protecting the health of our community, we need your support.

Please join us for Rubies & Roses, our annual fundraising event in recognition of World AIDS
Day, on Saturday, December 6, 2025, at The Willows at Ashcombe Mansion in
Mechanicsburg. This year’s event is especially meaningful as we celebrate both Alder Health Services’ 40th Anniversary and the enduring spirit of Rubies & Roses as one milestone occasion.


Your participation and generosity will help ensure that Alder Health continues its vital
work—caring for, empowering, and uplifting our community well into the future!

Purchase tickets here!

 

Sponsored Content

Continue Reading